Vikings .
Publié le 03/05/2013
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Wessex (England) and Charles II the Bald and Louis III in France could command their resources to move to fortify their towns, station fleets and naval patrols alongthe coasts, and organize localized and mobile military forces.
Some Christian leaders paid ransom to the larger Viking armies of the 10th and early 11th centuries.Taxing their people to pay the “danegeld,” the tribute to the Vikings, became a regular defensive strategy.
But in return for the cash, the Vikings often negotiatedpeaceful coexistence and conversion.
In 911 Charles III the Simple of France ceded Normandy (French for “territory of the Northmen”) to the Viking leader Rollo and hiswarriors, who became his Christian vassals.
In turn they pledged to defend their new duchy against other Vikings.
These Vikings, now called Normans, adopted the French language and ways and organized a strong state in Normandy.
In 1066 William, Duke of Normandy, led hisfollowers across the English Channel to conquer England.
In the same century the exploits of such Norman adventurers as Robert Guiscard created the Normankingdom of Sicily, at the expense of the Muslims in Sicily and the Byzantine emperor in southern Italy.
Normans from Sicily also took part in the Crusades against theMuslims in the Holy Land.
In addition to their role as invaders of settled, Christian lands, numerous bands of Viking adventurers reached Iceland in the mid-9th century, and by 900 their newhome had become a center for settlement by Norwegians and Danes.
Iceland was a launching point for expeditions and ventures farther out into the North Atlantic.Around 982 Erik the Red led an expedition from Iceland which settled in Greenland.
His son Leif Eriksson later landed on North America, which he called Vinland, orWineland, because of the large numbers of grapes that he and his men found.
Archaeological work indicates that the original Vinland settlement was probably at what isnow L’Anse aux Meadows in the Canadian province of Newfoundland and Labrador.
Literary and archaeological evidence supports the existence of colonies in NorthAmerica, supplied and populated for several generations before distance and climate proved too much.
The Vikings who went west, across the ocean, and south, to the British Isles and continental Europe, were mostly from Norway and Denmark.
Expeditions from Swedenwere no less aggressive and vigorous.
They turned to the south and east, into and beyond the Baltic, away from the heartland of Christian Europe, and in a world ofvast spaces and few people.
These people were drawn by trading links rather than a thirst for empty land.
They traveled through Russia via the Volga and Dnieperrivers to Constantinople and Baghdad.
Along with the native Slavic peoples, the Swedish Vikings influenced the growth of the early Russian state around Kyiv (Kiev).The Swedish Vikings in Constantinople formed the Varangian guard of the Byzantine emperors in the 11th century.
As in their western expeditions, they were soldiers,new settlers, and able traders and voyagers.
IV INFLUENCE
There is no consensus on the extent of Viking migration and their contribution to the population in the lands where they settled.
Estimates differ on whether hundredsor thousands settled abroad.
There is also disagreement as to whether the settlers were primarily men, who intermarried abroad, or whether whole families came.
InIceland, of course, all life and social organization sprang directly from the Viking settlers, but the impact of the Viking settlers in the British Isles and in France is muchharder to determine accurately.
It is also not possible to gauge how disruptive and hostile the Vikings were.
Archaeological evidence reveals a culture that was the most advanced in Europe in themanufacture of arms and jewelry, as well as shipbuilding.
Many styles of Viking ships were adopted by other European powers, most notably Alfred the Great ofWessex.
The Vikings also displayed an ability to mobilize economic resources and to dominate a hostile landscape.
These abilities can be seen in their great fortifiedcamps, like that at Visby in Sweden, where hundreds of soldiers and traders lived.
Additionally, the Vikings fostered commerce, founding many prominent tradingcenters in England and France.
In addition, the Vikings created a rich body of vernacular literature in which they celebrated their heroic past.
The Icelandic sagas represent a vast collection of bothstories and histories.
Some concern the great leaders of heroic days and the kings of the 11th and 12th centuries; many others deal with the families, feuds, andchanging fortunes of the petty chieftains of Icelandic farmsteads and valleys in the 13th and 14th centuries.
The more historical sagas describe what is known about thecolonization of Iceland, the voyages to North America, and the rise of the powerful kings who led the efforts toward conversion and political consolidation.
The Poetic Edda of Snorri Sturluson, who wrote in the early 1200s, portrays pre-Christian Viking history and mythology.
See Icelandic Literature; Norwegian Literature.
Signs of the Viking influence are found in the languages, vocabulary, and place-names of the areas in which they settled.
These offer clues regarding the density ofmigration, the ease of assimilation, and the preservation of distinct northern institutions and usages.
An early form of popular or open government can be seen in theopen air Althing of Iceland, where the free farmers came to voice complaints, resolve feuds, and enunciate and interpret the law for free men and their families anddependents.
Icelanders view this as the earliest form of parliamentary government in Europe.
The jury of English common law was a direct outgrowth of Viking ideasabout community obligations and sworn investigations, both vital steps in building a civil society.
The Vikings were one of several waves of attackers to fall on Europe in the centuries after the short-lived eminence of the Carolingian Empire.
Others included theMagyars from Asia, who appeared on the eastern frontiers, and the Muslims, who worked outward from Spain and the Mediterranean.
At first, the Vikings’ impact wasprimarily disruptive and destructive.
Gradually the Vikings became part of the larger European community as they were attracted by a more settled life, and as ChristianEurope’s ability to resist their attacks grew.
The Vikings were great sailors and ferocious enemies, but also storytellers and workers of the highest level.
Contributed By:Joel T.
RosenthalMicrosoft ® Encarta ® 2009. © 1993-2008 Microsoft Corporation.
All rights reserved..
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Liens utiles
- DERNIER DES VIKINGS (Le) (résumé & analyse)
- Diversement jugés par l'histoire, les Vikings sont, pour les uns, des barbares avides de butin, pour les autres, les protagonistes d'une civilisation brillante, qui régénéra l'Occident.
- État le plus vaste de la péninsule scandinave, la Suède fut d'abord le berceau des navigateurs vikings, et subit tardivement l'influence du christianisme.
- Monarchie parlementaire de l'Europe septentrionale, ouverte sur la mer du Nord, et étirant le long de la péninsule scandinave un territoire très protégé, la Norvège est l'héritière des fiers guerriers vikings, terreur de l'Europe médiévale avant leur christianisation.
- Les Vikings On désigne sous le nom de Vikings les Norvégiens et les Danois.